New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY)

 - Class of 1935

Page 15 of 316

 

New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 15 of 316
Page 15 of 316



New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 14
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New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 16
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Page 15 text:

was re-organized, and its name was changed to the School of Education. In 1930 it moved into its own magnificent new build- ing. The division provides courses in almost every field of edu- cational and social instruction. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE, JACCOUNTS, AND FINANCE The New York State Society of Certified Public Accountants in 1900 saw the dire need for a distinctly professional college in the field of business. The result was the School of Commerce, Accounts, and Finance. In 1910 James Melvin Lee was ap- pointed .Director of Journalism. That same year ,marked the, beginning of a group of advertising courses instituted by the Ad-' vertising Club. So popular were these courses that the Depart- ment of Marketing was established. New departments in eco- nomics, commercial geography, management, trade and indus- try followed with courses seldom given elsewhere. I SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS I The School of Fine Arts was envisioned in 1835, when a- chair iI1 art was established with Samuel F. B. Morse, who later was to invent the telegraph and the Morse code, as its incum- bentg After his passing in 1872, the department was inactive until 1923, when it was re-established through the financial sup- port Of the Altman Foundation. In 1926 a Department of Archi- tecture was added, andlin ,luly 1928 the School of Fine Arts came i11to official existence. WASHINGTON SQUARE COLLEGE The year 1913 saw the organization of the Wasliingtoli Square College from what was called tl1e uCollegiate Division. This step was a sincere response to the city's urgent need for an educational center which embraced the arts. The faculty has designed a curriculum embodying a general academic education fitted to meet twentieth century requirements. A final develop- ment has been its evening division, where students may obtain their Bachelor degrees in five or six years. COLLEGE OF DENTISTRY In June 1925 the New York College of Dentistry gave up the name it had held for 69 years, joined the University family, and became the New York University School of Dentistry. It now offers a four-year day program at 209 East Twenty-third Street, at the successful conclusion of which the degree of Doc- tor -of Dental Surgery is granted. Post-graduate courses are given during the year to licensed dentists. , WASHINGTON SQUARE COLLEGE COULD MEMORIAL LIBRARY JUDSON DORMITORY

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FTALL OF FAME HALL OF LANGUAGES SCIIOOL OF EDUCATION New York University: A History HEN a group of visionary townsmen in 1831 saw the need for a uliberaln university, the cityis leading public- spirited citizens contributed an endowment fund of Sll5,000. Albert Gallatin, trusted adviser of Thomas Jefferson aI1d Secre- tary of the Treasury, was chosen president of tl1e first University Council. Wllell classes started in Temple Court OI1 Nassau and Beekman Streets fifteen professors comprised the faculty. SCHOOL OF LAW 1835 saw the founding of the School of Law, when the then Federal Attorney General Benjamin F. Butler published his plan for a law school at New York University, had his ideas ac- cepted, a11d became the school's first professor. It opened its doors to women iI1 1890. From thirty students and one in- structor iI1 1859 to 1300 students and more than thirty instructors at the present time has been the constant progress of the law school. lVTEDICAL SCHOOL The New York University Medical School was founded i11 1841, but not until 1898 did it merge with Bellevue. Here were hospital, dispensary, and university, a combination unequalled in New York or iI1 the entire nation. Bellevue transferred all its equipment and buildings, including its 11ew headquarters on First Avenue and its Carnegie-endowed laboratory on Twenty- sixth Street. Amo11g the school's prominent alumni, titans of medicine, are Walter Reed, Williaiii Crawford, William C. Corgas and lsadore Harry Goldberger. SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING AND ARCHITECTURE The University,s catalog of J une, 1854 announced a School of Civil Engineering and Architecture. A handful of students came, but the attendance rose steadily. Lectures were held in a small room atop the old Square building and were constantly interrupted by shivering students putting more coal into the pot-bellied stove that stood iI1 the center of the classroom. Following Lindbergh's flight to Paris, the School of Aeronautics became the most popular of the nation's aeronautical institu- tioI1s. SCHOOL OF EDUCATION In 1890, classes were held in what was then called the School of Pedagogy. Men and women seeking the epitome of educa- tional instruction enrolled in this college. ln 1921 the college



Page 16 text:

ll'l'FAl,l. AT Tm: SQIQ-'tlil-I I vl'luN1:r3 'ro Conn!-Ll llllli SQIQARIE Il.-X3ll'l'h 35 Yea rs of tl0llllll0l'00 History S early as 1833, when Xew York City was fast becoming the new metropolis of America, the 11eed for special collegiate instruction for those who were to enter upon careers in thc cityis mercantile establishments was recognized. In the minutes of the New York University Council of February 12, 1833, we Hnd as a subject for consideration Lathe expediency and propriety of the establislnnent of a professorship of commerce. But the time for such a move was not yet ripe, and not until the dawn of the twentieth century was a separate school of commerce established. August, 1900 saw the realization of long continued efforts. Under the leadership of Chancellor Henry Mitchell Mac- Cracken the school was given University sanction. It had no endowment: the sponsors merely pledged themselves to meet all deficits. During its history of thirty-four years the School of Commerce has never been a liability to the University. The early faculty of the school undertook their work with inspired zeal under the leadership of the first Dean, Charles 1Yaldo Haskins. The school proved popular from the very start when sixty registered the first year. Since then the attendance has mounted until last semester the registration was 6621. Two years after the opening of the school evening classes became so crowded that afternoon sessions were started, and a three year program for the degree of Bachelor of Commercial Science was instituted. Convinced of the value of a knowledge of journalism to the business man, Dean Joseph French Johnson instituted in 1910 journalism courses. In 1911 Professor James Melvin Lee was appointed to take charge of this department. Upon his death in 1929 Professor H. B. Rathbone became chairman. So rapidly did the college grow that in 1912 the day session as well as a Brooklyn division was established. Two years later the Wvall Street Division was founded. In 1920 the Graduate School of Business Administration was established, with Archibald Wellington Taylor as Dean. In the same year the old Trinity School building at 90 Trinity Place

Suggestions in the New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) collection:

New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

1937

New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

New York University School of Commerce - Commerce Violet Yearbook (New York, NY) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941


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